SteamDB chart showing 1.4 million people playing now

  • TJA!
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    3 months ago

    Isn’t this the game where reviewers/streamers(?) are not allowed to mention feminism?

    • @rustyfish
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      923 months ago

      Just checked. It is. Fuck that CCP shit.

    • Coelacanth
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      703 months ago

      Reviewers were also forbidden from using trigger words such as “COVID-19” and “quarantine”.

      • @BreadstickNinja
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        183 months ago

        So if I posted a review saying that Black Myth: Wukong is as badass as when Rosie the Riveter invented COVID in a Chinese lab, would they be upset?

        • Coelacanth
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          213 months ago

          Not sure, but to be on the safe side just don’t title it “Black Myth Wukong is the most impactful global phenomenon to come out of China since the pandemic”.

    • Eggyhead
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      333 months ago

      It’s funny to me that they even felt a need for this clause. What does the game have to do with feminism or Covid? It’s based on ancient Chinese mythology in ancient China telling a fictional story featuring Chinese mythological beings that are not real. Why would there be any reason to bring feminism or Covid into that in the first place?

      It’s so weird and seems really snowflakey to me.

      • @[email protected]
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        223 months ago

        Why would there be any reason to bring feminism or Covid into that in the first place?

        From another article:

        The cautionary note against “feminist propaganda” is a reminder that Game Science have yet to respond to allegations of pervasive sexist behaviour from November last year. In a lengthy report for IGN, Rebekah Valentine and Khee Hoon Chan described “a studio plagued by claims of sexism”, linking this to misogyny elsewhere in the Chinese games industry and on the government-firewalled Chinese internet. The developers have raised the drawbridge in response: when Edders attended a preview event earlier this year, they refused to say anything on the subject in advance.

        • @Ultraviolet
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          3 months ago

          The irony is that without the warning to attempt to suppress discussion about that, people might have just forgotten about it.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        Lots of streamers will play games while discussing other topics, and those topics can often be seen as controversial. Clearly the company wanted to avoid any video existing where someone was discussing unrelated controversial topics over the top of their gameplay.

        It backfired on them cause obviously you can’t control everyone and everything but I can understand from a business standpoint their desire to remain neutral and not be part of that crowd.

        Look at gamergate. The video game internet world is still not far removed from immensely controversial and offensive behaviors. Maybe they just wanted to avoid any association that could theoretically occur.

        I’m not excusing them. Just attempting to understand it in any practival sense without immediately becoming alarmist like everyone does.

        Setting aside the CCP angle, it comes off kind of like back when Michael Jordan says all political parties buy Jordan’s.

    • @ieatpwns
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      103 months ago

      Specifically reviewers who want free keys aren’t allowed to mention the feminism stuff. Any reviewer paying for it out of pocket can’t be silenced or censored

    • @CosmoNova
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      43 months ago

      How despicable. Hopefully this will Barbara Streisand in their faces eventually.

    • @gcheliotis
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      -133 months ago

      This is possibly fake as noted on another thread.

  • @[email protected]
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    473 months ago

    AAA Chinese game, not surprising that it would be so popular but a majority must be Chinese player as it didn’t get that much coverage in the rest of the world as far as I understand from everyone’s reaction…

    • DarkThoughts
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      233 months ago

      The majority of coverage I heard about it were about the scandals at the studio.

    • @PunchingWood
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      3 months ago

      Not sure why people downvote you, but most must be. Because I checked the player count this morning in Europe and it was also at 1,5 million. The only ones that play games in early hours of Europe are a majority in Asia, more specifically China. This has also been my experience with online matchmaking in early hours of the day, it’s 9 out of 10 chance I got matched with either Chinese or Koreans during those hours.

      I knew of this game but had already forgotten about it. Just got notified recently because the benchmark was downloaded a lot past week.

    • Stern
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      73 months ago

      China supports in country stuff, most countries do really, so long as quality is comparable, and its been slowly but steadily getting there. Saw an article posted on lemmy somewhere earlier today how a locally made movie is topping their box office while Deadpool and Wolverine isn’t even top 10.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 months ago

        For sure, I wasn’t criticizing, just pointing out that it’s probably the reason why there’s so many players yet barely anyone in this thread had heard about it

    • @[email protected]
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      33 months ago

      It’s all over my RSS feeds, so it’s certainly being covered now.

      There’s been some (not exactly scientific) indications that the vast majority of the userbase is in China so it remains to be seen if it was actually a success in the West or not.

  • @inclementimmigrant
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    403 months ago

    Currently trying to avoid as many products as I feasible can that are owned directly by China, plus with the controversy of their review tactics being kind of about, I’ll pass on this game and wait for the seas to calm

    • @ATDA
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      73 months ago

      Hell I’d be afraid to protest torrent this one. At least on consoles their software could only spy on so much.

      • @filister
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        23 months ago

        Seriously guys, you think every digital product coming from China is done specifically to spy on your petty porn habits. Witch hunt 101.

        • @TheDemonBuer
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          13 months ago

          The level of paranoia is kind of crazy.

  • @juice702
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    283 months ago

    CCP product. Looks cool but I’ll skip it or pirate it later.

    • @ampersandrew
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      293 months ago

      I’ve barely heard about it, and here in the US, I would not call it highly anticipated, but perhaps the story is different in China.

    • magic_lobster_party
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      133 months ago

      I’m surprised so many say they never heard about it. It was all over the place when a gameplay trailer was shown a few years ago. David Jaffe even made a video about how he didn’t understand the hype, and then took it all back once the trailer reached the boss fight.

      https://youtu.be/4cgYZw5MSxU

      • Carighan Maconar
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        3 months ago

        I mean I saw it, but it immediately got filed under “Just another pretty-in-renders soulsy clone”. There are so many thousands of them, they’re just some background buzz in game releases.

        And I’ll readily admit, I don’t even know whether it is a soulslike, and neither do I care to find out. That’s how invisible this game is when you scroll past it, as it immediately mascerades as a game in an ocean of utterly samey titles.

      • @Siethron
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        53 months ago

        I enjoy a lot of games but don’t follow IGN or similar outlets. I did pay attention to e3 when it happened but that’s no longer a thing. My news comes mostly from steam store/Lemmy gaming communities/memes Meaning I’ve never hear of it either until I saw Dunkey’s satire video.

      • @baatliwala
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        43 months ago

        Does it matter? The scale of population makes US literally irrelevant in this conversation.

          • @baatliwala
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            3 months ago

            That’s where most of the gaming population of the world is innit? Excluding China, if a game doesn’t have a playerbase in the US it’s very unlikely to chart on Steam and is therefore unlikely to be “popular”. Only exceptions are games like Football Manager and they are not the norm.

  • @rustyfish
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    233 months ago

    Crazy. Never heard of it.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      This is proof that lemmy crowd is a totally isolated minority. This is one of the most anticipated games of the year.

      • @rustyfish
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        83 months ago

        Yes, I am only on Lemmy. I do not engage with other communities around the internet nor do I talk to anyone from the outernet. Especially not my friends who also like to play games.

        Jfc, game literally came out today and the fanboys are already insufferable.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          I haven’t played the game. I’m not a fanboy but this game has so many creators making content since way back to the trailer launch. Almost all major outlets made articles about it since then. This was considered one of the anticipated games of this year. Idk millions of views and million and half playing are all chinese according to other commentator above you.

          I’m not attacking you. It was not my intention. I’m just calling out what I see. I hope you dont take this to heart too.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          As the second person on lemmy I think I’ve heard of it but nothing really comes to mind, should ask my other buddies who are into gaming tho

      • Alimentar
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        13 months ago

        They’re probably playing casual furry games lol

  • @CosmoNova
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    123 months ago

    Surely China wouldn’t use their infamous and vast network of bot farms to push it’s most anticipated game of the year. Surely.

  • sunbunman
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    113 months ago

    Ignoring all of the drama around it, it genuinely looks like a well made game. Will be waiting for the DRM to expire before trying it out.

  • @[email protected]
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    83 months ago

    Well

    I must be sincere, and say I would never expected this

    It’s more players than Elden ring or Baldur’s gate 3 at launch.

    • Skua
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      203 months ago

      I don’t think that should be terribly surprising. Both those games are targeted at specific niches. They were notably successful for gaining popularity beyond their niches, but they were still niche products. Elden Ring is still incredibly obtuse and will fucking murder you out the gates and just expect you to pick yourself up and try again. BG3 is a D&D game that expects you to know the tabletop version to a degree. Both are awesome, but they’re aimed at narrower markets

      • @ABCDE
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        133 months ago

        I don’t think the people I know who played BG3 had ever touched D&D. Elden Ring hit a huge audience, many of whom had never tried Souls games before.

        • Skua
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          53 months ago

          Fair enough on Elden Ring actually, I looked up the sales numbers and it did do very well for any videogame rather than “just” very well for a FromSoft game as I had thought

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        Is it, though? The Chinese “government” decides which games their subjects are allowed to play, and this game is one of the handful of new games allowed each year.

  • The Picard Maneuver
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    63 months ago

    Looked up a video of the gameplay last night, and it looks pretty cool. I wonder if it feels as good as it looks. Apparently this is a company that previously only made mobile games.

    • @PunchingWood
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      63 months ago

      I read some reviews comparing it more to God of War and Jedi Survivor games.

      Which sounds pretty good to me, although the style of the game hasn’t been really been appealing to me (yet).

        • DremorM
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          3 months ago

          And that, my friend, is a fallacy fallacy (or Argumentum ad logicam if you wish to be posh as heck).

          Pointing out your opponent fallacies doesn’t make yours valid. I’d also add that this is not a Stawman fallacy, as he does not attempt to replace your (absence of) argument with one that he refutes, but rather an Ad Hominem.

          Edit : I’d add that yours is also an Ad Hominem, which makes it quite ironic.